Press release
Rambus Delivers Quantum Safe IP Solutions with Next-Generation Root of Trust for Data Center Security
Highlights: Expands industry-leading security IP offerings with first in a family of Quantum Safe IP solutions Next-gen Root of Trust safeguards data centers

About this update from Rambus, Inc.
[{"type":"text","content":"\nHighlights:\n\n\n\nExpands industry-leading security IP offerings with first in a family of Quantum Safe IP solutions\n\n\n\nNext-gen Root of Trust safeguards data centers and communications from future attacks in post quantum computing era\n\n\n\nState-of-the-art programmable security solution protects hardware and data with NIST and CNSA quantum-resistant algorithms\n\n\n\n SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--\nRambus Inc. (NASDAQ: RMBS), a premier chip and silicon IP provider making data faster and safer, today announced the first in a family of Quantum Safe security IP products with its next-generation Root of Trust for data center and communications security. Quantum computers will be able to rapidly break current asymmetric encryption, placing important data and assets at risk. The Rambus Root of Trust IP offers customers a complete Post Quantum Cryptography (PQC) hardware security solution that protects valuable data center and AI/ML assets and systems.\n\nThis press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230712355828/en/Next-Generation Rambus Root of Trust with Quantum Safe Engine (Graphic: Business Wire)\n“To ensure today’s data remains protected into the future, we must implement now security solutions that safeguard against quantum attacks,” said Neeraj Paliwal, general manager of Security IP at Rambus. “This new generation of the Rambus Root of Trust is a flagship product in our Quantum Safe IP portfolio that offers customers complete security solutions for the data center and advanced workloads like generative AI.”\n\n\n“Since 2016, NIST has done pioneering efforts to identify post-quantum cryptographic algorithms which will be better suited for protecting critical government and public infrastructure from entities looking to steal data now to decrypt later using quantum computing,” said Heather West, PhD, research manager of Quantum Computing Research at IDC. “Now that NIST has announced its first four post-quantum computing recommendations, it is important that system designers begin implementing quantum-resistant cryptography to ensure that data and hardware remain secure in the quantum computing era.”\n\n\nRambus Root of Trust IP with Quantum Safe Cryptography uses the quantum-compute resistant cryptographic algorithms selected by the National Institute...